Homilies

Homily for the Chrism Mass
Homilies

Homily for the Chrism Mass

St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney, Maundy Thursday, 17 April 2025 “Naked and unashamed”—that’s how the Book of Genesis describes our first

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE THIRTY-SECOND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE THIRTY-SECOND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B

Sir Jamshedji Nusserwanji Tata, the 19th century Persian-Indian industrialist, founded India’s largest business conglomerate, the Tata Group, and established the eponymous city of Jamshedpur. In his lifetime he gave away more than $US100 billion in today’s values, far more than big…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE THIRTY-FIRST SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE THIRTY-FIRST SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B

In 2015, tech-giant Microsoft set out to build the world’s quietest room for testing headphones, microphones and the like.[1] After more than two years they had constructed a room of six layers of concrete and steel, sitting on vibration-damping springs. The floor is a grid of suspended cables and the walls…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 22ND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (B) + EPHPHETA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 22ND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (B) + EPHPHETA

The term ‘lawfare’ first came to prominence in 2001, when an American Air Force Colonel (now Major General and Professor of Law), Charles J. Dunlap Jnr, delivered a speech at Harvard University. He challenged what he saw as the weaponising of the legal system against the defence forces…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC HEALTH AUSTRALIA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC HEALTH AUSTRALIA

A distraught mother wails inconsolably as the corpse of her son is carried out for burial (Lk 7:11-17). We don’t know the cause of death, age of the deceased, or the family circumstances, but Luke the Beloved Physician is meticulous, as a health professional should be, in his observations and charting…

HOMILY FOR EVENING MASS OF THE 20TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR EVENING MASS OF THE 20TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

Parapraxis, according to Sigmund Freud, is an error of speech due to an unconscious wish or internal train of thought.[1] More than moments of humour and humiliation, these ‘Freudian slips’ (as they came to be called) are supposedly windows into our true thoughts and feelings…

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS FOR THE NINETEENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS FOR THE NINETEENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B

The British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins has an illustrious CV. For 13 years he held the University of Oxford’s Chair in the Public Understanding of Science and in 2001 was made a fellow of the prestigious Royal Society. He’s authored nineteen books and countless articles and received numerous honours. His most important work has been on the role of genes and DNA in evolution, culminating in his…

Homily for Mass of the Feast of the Transfiguration
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Feast of the Transfiguration

Jesus mostly eschewed the limelight, preferring to preach and heal through small gestures that encouraged and persuaded, rather than big ones that wowed and overwhelmed. But sometimes He “let rip”, as it were, and today was such a day. He goes up a mountain as if He were the new Moses. But where the first Moses went to converse with God, this One is revealed to be the very conversation of God, the Logos, communication…

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS OF THE FIFTEENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS OF THE FIFTEENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B

The term ‘quiet quitting’ first appeared in the social media a little over two years ago. A 17-second video clip that went viral on TikTok sparked a global debate about work especially amongst young, disaffected professionals. The online trend quickly morphed into a broader social phenomenon, with countless articles appearing in the mainstream media…

Homily for the Mass of Ordination to the Priesthood of Rev. Mr Adrian Suyanto, Rev. Mr Likisone Tominiko and Rev. Br Charbel Boustany FFI, Memorial of St Benedict
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of Ordination to the Priesthood of Rev. Mr Adrian Suyanto, Rev. Mr Likisone Tominiko and Rev. Br Charbel Boustany FFI, Memorial of St Benedict

A recent article in Seek.com outlined the importance of a well-crafted job description for attracting suitable candidates and establishing expectations for the role.[i] According to the experts, a good j.d. must showcase the company, describe the critical functions and core responsibilities of the position, and specify qualifications and rewards.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF CORPUS CHRISTI THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF JESUS CHRIST
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF CORPUS CHRISTI THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF JESUS CHRIST

It was probably the largest gathering ever held in Sydney. Half a million people packed the streets for a week. The opening and closing ceremonies gathered people of every stripe from all around our city, country and globe, ordinary people both young and old, and a Who’s Who of celebrities. Despite adverse publicity in the lead up, Sydney was a joyful host, and in the end almost everyone judged it a great success…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY, YEAR B

There’s a million dollar purse just waiting for you. All you have to do is be the first person to solve one of seven extremely complex maths problems.[1] Some of the conundrums are centuries old and have been attempted by some of the most brilliant minds in history. But in the 24 years since the Millennium Prize Problems were set and the reward offered by the Clay Mathematics Institute…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF OUR LADY, HELP OF CHRISTIANS, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF OUR LADY, HELP OF CHRISTIANS, YEAR B

You’ve probably all heard of Siri, Alexa, Bixby and Google Assistant: in fact, at your young age, you probably know more about these things than I do. Some of you have already used them and most of you will in the future. They are virtual assistants for your smart phone, watch, tablet or computer, that perform tasks like reading out messages…

HOMILY FOR MAXIMUS MEN’S MINISTRY NETWORK MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MAXIMUS MEN’S MINISTRY NETWORK MASS

The Irish poet, dramatist and senator, William Butler Yeats, was one of the foremost literary figures of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1923 he won the Nobel Prize in Literature for “his always inspired poetry, which in highly artistic form gives expression to the spirit of a whole nation.”[1] A central figure in the resurgence of Irish literature,[2] his influence stretched…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR CONSECRATED LIFE
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR CONSECRATED LIFE

Twenty-eight years ago, following the Synod on consecrated life, Pope St John Paul II released his Apostolic Exhortation, Vita Consecrata.[1] Its opening sentence reads: “The Consecrated Life, deeply rooted in the example and teaching of Christ the Lord, is a gift of God the Father to his Church through the Holy Spirit.”…

HOMILY FOR THE SOLEMN MASS OF PENTECOST (YEAR B) + ADULT CONFIRMATIONS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE SOLEMN MASS OF PENTECOST (YEAR B) + ADULT CONFIRMATIONS

Around 1600 Doménikos Theotok/ópoulos—known as El Greco—painted his Pentecost, now in the Prado in Madrid. Born in Crete, where he studied Byzantine iconography, he honed his skills at the feet of the master Titian, while imitating the likes of Michelangelo, Raphael and Tintoretto. Yet he had his own distinctive style, with tortuously elongated figures and phantasmagorical pigmentation…

HOMILY FOR THE REQUIEM MASS FOR MOST REV. PETER INGHAM
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE REQUIEM MASS FOR MOST REV. PETER INGHAM

I was there when Bishop Peter Ingham, during an Ad limina visit of all the Bishops of Australia to Rome, asked one of the gloriously dressed Vatican soldiers what country he was from. “Switzerland,” the guarded guard answered. “Switzerland?” Peter said, “I didn’t know there were Catholics in Switzerland.” Then he asked another of the guards, “And what country are you from?” “Switzerland,” the puzzled youth answered, to which the elderly Australian bishop responded…

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE SIXTH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR B + ACBC PLENARY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE SIXTH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR B + ACBC PLENARY

The idea of the ‘golden ticket’ was first popularised in Roald Dahl’s 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and its subsequent film adaptations. A poor paperboy named Charlie Bucket has his life turned upside down when he finds a golden ticket in a chocolate bar, inviting him to visit Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. He tours the chocolate palace with four other children: the gluttonous Augustus Gloop, the snobby Veruca Salt…

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY

Is war just human nature? According to a recent article in Scientific American, answers to this question tend to fall into two camps. The ‘Hawks’ hold that taking up arms is an evolved human behaviour aimed at eliminating competitors. War is an expression of natural animal aggression and defensiveness, preferencing survival of the group…

Homily for Mass for Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Easter
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Easter

In today’s Gospel Jesus is in the Temple on the winter Feast of the Dedication or ‘Hannukah’ (Jn 10:22-30). Just as it is today, it was celebrated around the time of His birthday. Jewish holy days are Scriptural in origin: Shabbat, the Saturday day of rest and weekly observance of God’s completion of creation; Rosh Hashanah…

HOMILY FOR “PASCHAL EUCHARIST”
Homilies

HOMILY FOR “PASCHAL EUCHARIST”

The Washington Post calls him “Britain’s rock-star shepherd”.[1] The “shepherd-author-influencer” with over a hundred thousand social media followers, James Rebanks rose to prominence off the back of his autobiography, The Shepherd’s Life (2015)…

HOMILY FOR THE RITUAL MASS OF DEDICATION OF A CHURCH AND ALTAR
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE RITUAL MASS OF DEDICATION OF A CHURCH AND ALTAR

In The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls the nineteenth-century American poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, a contemporary of John Bede Polding, used the imagery of an adventurer like Polding crossing oceans and lands to visit various communities, as a way to reflect on time and mortality…

“HOLY STONE”: HOMILY FOR THE EASTER VIGIL IN THE HOLY NIGHT
Homilies

“HOLY STONE”: HOMILY FOR THE EASTER VIGIL IN THE HOLY NIGHT

It’s the holiest place on earth—the Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem—and on entering it the first thing you see is the Stone of Unction, traditionally the slab upon which Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus laid out the dead Jesus to embalm Him (Jn 19:39-40). Last year I was blessed to visit that place with Father Lewi…

“HOLY LANCE”: Homily for the Celebration of the Passion of Our Lord
Homilies

“HOLY LANCE”: Homily for the Celebration of the Passion of Our Lord

The Holy Lance or Spear of Destiny is the one that pierced Jesus’ side in today’s Passion of St John (Jn chs 18 & 19 at 19:34). Like the Grail (or chalice) of the Last Supper, the Lance became the subject of various extrabiblical traditions, including the Arthurian legend. In Chrétien de Troyes’ medieval poem Perceval, the Fisher King has keeping of both Lance and Grail…

“HOLY GRAIL”: HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE LORD’S SUPPER
Homilies

“HOLY GRAIL”: HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE LORD’S SUPPER

The quest for the Holy Grail was part of the Arthurian legend that evolved in the Middle Ages, first in Celtic ballards and then French romances.[1] In Chrétien de Troyes’ Perceval, the grail was a miraculous food salver, protected by the Fisher King.[2] When Robert de Boron retold the tale in his Joseph of Arimathea, it had become the Chalice used by Our Lord at His Last Supper, now with healing powers…

“LIQUID GOLD” – Homily for the Chrism Mass
Homilies

“LIQUID GOLD” – Homily for the Chrism Mass

Liquid gold. Homer’s ancient name for olive oil[1] has made a comeback, following a surge in prices across the Mediterranean.[2] Drought and a bacterial infection have seen global production fall this past year and the price of a litre of olive oil rise from €5 to as much as €20. Last week it was reported that olive oil is now the most shoplifted product in Spain, surpassing even razor blades, alcohol and ham, and shops…

Homily for Mass for the 4th Sunday of Lent (Lætare Sunday), Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the 4th Sunday of Lent (Lætare Sunday), Year B

“The Son of Man must be lifted up, like the serpent Moses lifted up in the desert” (Jn 3:14). It’s an extraordinary thing for Jesus to compare Himself with a snake, for in the ancient world serpent-gods were amongst the worst. Apep, the Egyptian god of chaos, took the form of a serpent. Medusa, the Gorgon sister of Greek mythology…

Homily for Mass of the 3rd Sunday of Lent, Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the 3rd Sunday of Lent, Year B

It was thought to be a rather ordinary Baroque painting, by an unknown disciple of Guido Reni, so its reserve price at a Paris auction house was €6,000. But the baroque depiction of Moses sold just over a year ago for a staggering €600,000.[1] Art dealer Fabrizio Moretti was so convinced of its worth, he outbid all the competition.[2] He had the painting restored, uncovering a striking luminesce beneath the ageing varnish and centuries of filth, and confirmed that it was by the Baroque master Giovanni Barbieri, known as “Guercino”—the squinter—because of a lazy eye that clearly didn’t compromise…

Homily for Mass of the 2nd Sunday of Lent, Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the 2nd Sunday of Lent, Year B

It was known as The Nuremberg Defence. Following the Second World War, an International Military Tribunal was established by the principal Allied powers, tasked with prosecuting those responsible for the most heinous of the Nazi “crimes against humanity”. The so-called ‘Nuremberg Trials’ convicted nineteen officials for their roles in planning…

Homily for Mass for the Feast of the Chair of the Apostle Peter
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the Feast of the Chair of the Apostle Peter

The recently aired ABC docuseries Nemesis offers a dramatic account of the internal wars, external challenges and multiple leadership coups of the Liberal-National Party coalition when in power from 2013 to ’22. In particular, it charts the rise and fall of Prime Ministers Tony Abbott, Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison, based on interviews with two of them and a supporting cast of ministers and staffers. It’s a captivating tale of the perils of power and personality, the egos…

Homily for Mass Commissioning of Beginning Teachers for Sydney Catholic Schools
Homilies

Homily for Mass Commissioning of Beginning Teachers for Sydney Catholic Schools

Jonah was a prophet from the eighth century before Christ, whose tug-o-war with God gave us one of the great stories of vocational call and response, fright and flight, failure and success in a calling—all of which explains why we hear excerpts from the story in Lent, the season of return and reconciliation. But all most people know about Jonah is that he spent…

Homily for Mass for the 1st Sunday of Lent, Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the 1st Sunday of Lent, Year B

Whether it’s ads on TV or your smartphone, flyers in doctors’ surgeries, billboards at railway stations, everywhere we look, we’re challenged to “torch, tone and transform”—torch the fat, tone the muscles, transform our fitness. There are workouts designed for your particular body-shape and goals, dietary exclusions and supplements, lifestyle fixes, coaching and motivational techniques…

Homily for Ash Wednesday Mass
Homilies

Homily for Ash Wednesday Mass

‘Life-extensionists,’ ‘immortalists’ or ‘longevists’—their goal is to live for as long as they can. Using tissue rejuvenation, regenerative medicine, molecular and gene therapy, stem cells, organ replacement, and pharmaceuticals, they try to push the boundaries of the human life span. The American tech entrepreneur, Bryan Johnson, has gone to extreme lengths, including multimillion-dollar…

Homily for Mass of the Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

Rod Serling’s popular sci-fi series, The Twilight Zone, ran for five seasons between 1959 and 1964. : Ranked amongst the most successful television series of all time, it had a reputation for suspenseful, mind-bending narratives that ended with a clever, unforeseen twist. The Twilight Zone has since been remade three times as a TV series and twice as a movie…

HOMILY FOR MASS OF ST JOHN BOSCO + OPENING OF SEMINARY YEAR 2024
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF ST JOHN BOSCO + OPENING OF SEMINARY YEAR 2024

A while ago TIME magazine published an article on “How to Raise Happy Kids.”[1] It began by noting that whilst there’s a plethora of information on how to raise successful and clever children —whether traditional, personal, pop cultural or more scientifically validated. But the overwhelming concern of parents is their children’s happiness. Moreover, wise…

Homily for the Red Mass
Homilies

Homily for the Red Mass

Previously Chief Justice of Newfoundland, the Bermuda-born Scots lawyer, Francis Forbes, arrived in Sydney Town in March 1824 to assume the office of Chief Justice of New South Wales.[1] In May the Charter of Justice establishing the Supreme Court was proclaimed, and the oath of office administered to the newly appointed Attorney-General and Registrar. Practicing certificates were granted soon after. At that stage Forbes was not only the chief judge but the only one…

Homily for the Australia Day Mass
Homilies

Homily for the Australia Day Mass

The idea of Terra Australis Incognita, a huge and mysterious southern continent, was born of two ideas in the ancient world.[1] First, it was hypothesised that if the world was round—as most experts in the ancient world agreed it was—then to keep the balance there would likely be a great land mass in the Southern hemisphere as big as Eurasia in the North, sustaining a large antipodean population….

Homily for the Memorial Mass for George Cardinal Pell
Homilies

Homily for the Memorial Mass for George Cardinal Pell

Years ago, I was in a lift in Goold House, then the Archdiocese of Melbourne’s chancery building, when I overheard some officials discussing the translation of George Pell to Sydney. One remarked that his motto had been “Be not afraid” and wondered what his successor’s watchword would be. From the back of the lift I whispered, “Be very afraid!”…

HOMILY FOR THE MORNING MASS OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MORNING MASS OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD

“On the twenty-fifth day of December in the Year of Our Lord 2023, when ages beyond number had run their course since the redemption of the world; when century upon century had passed since the Cross called all humanity to peace; in the twenty-first century since the apostles went out to all the world; in the 78th year of the reign of the United..

The Christmas Gift of Happiness
Homilies

The Christmas Gift of Happiness

Only four sleeps till Christmas or three for those attending the Midnight Mass. Three or four sleeps till we receive the greatest ever gift. What shall we call it? The Prophet Isaiah names it עִמָּנוּאֵל Emmanu-ēl, God-with-us (Isa 7:14; 8:8). But what kind of God is this God with us? A few verses later Isaiah gives us more names: פֶּלֶא יוֹעֵץ‎ אֵל גִּבּוֹר אֲבִיעַד שַׂר־שָׁלוֹם‎  Pe-leʾ yōʿēṣ  ʾēl gībbōr  ʾáḇīʿaḏ  śar-šālōm, Wonder Counsellor…

Homily for Mass of 21 December + CAS End of Year Celebration
Homilies

Homily for Mass of 21 December + CAS End of Year Celebration

Harald Gormsson (911- c. 985), son of Gorm the Languid, was a tenth-century King of the Danes (c. 958 – c. 985). He united what are today Denmark, Norway and Sweden as one Viking kingdom. He was the father of Sweyn Forkbeard, and grandfather of King Canute, the King of England who famously ordered the tide to halt and not wet his toe…

Homily for Mass of Gaudete Sunday (3rd Sunday of Advent) Year B
Homilies

Homily for Mass of Gaudete Sunday (3rd Sunday of Advent) Year B

“Enjoy!” the young lady said to me as she handed me a café latte recently. My instinct was to correct her grammar, to suggest that “Rejoice” would be a better imperative or subjunctive verb. But you can’t complain when a young person is wishing you well, maybe even blessing you without realising it. And today is Gaudete or Rejoice Sunday, as if the Church…

Homily for Memorial Mass for George Cardinal Pell and Margaret Pell
Homilies

Homily for Memorial Mass for George Cardinal Pell and Margaret Pell

The Book of Genesis has many tales of sibling rivalry. The first brothers fight, and Cain kills Abel (Gen 4). There’s tension between Abraham’s son Isaac and his half-brother Ishmael (Gen 21). Isaac’s son Jacob fights with his twin Esau even in the womb and eventually steals his brother’s birthright (Gen 25 & 27). Jacob’s sons demonstrate the same family…

Homily for Mass of the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of Mary
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of Mary

According to Dictionary.com, a ‘screenager’ is any teen or young person who is proficient at using smartphones, computers, or tech gadgets in general, and who spends considerable amounts of time on social media or gaming apps.[1] Screenagers are mostly Gen-Zedders, born between 1996 and 2010. They are the…

Reflection for an Occasion of Common Lamentation and Prayer for Peace
Homilies

Reflection for an Occasion of Common Lamentation and Prayer for Peace

His name amongst Jews is Yirmeyahu (ירמיה), amongst Muslims Irmiyā, and for Christians Jeremiah “the weeping prophet” (c. 650-570 BC). To him are attributed the Books of Jeremiah, of Kings and of Lamentations. The last of these, from which we have just read (Lam 3:17-26), is a series of poetic laments…

Homily for the Pontifical Mass of Christian Burial for Mons. William Mullins
Homilies

Homily for the Pontifical Mass of Christian Burial for Mons. William Mullins

The aphorism “Ipsa scientia potestas est”—knowledge itself is power—was coined by the English statesman and pioneer of the scientific method, Sir Francis Bacon in his Meditationes Sacrae (1597). It was simplified a half-century later in Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan as ‘knowledge is power.’
Yet the idea goes back…

Homily for the Lourdes Day Mass for the Order of Malta
Homilies

Homily for the Lourdes Day Mass for the Order of Malta

Cappadocia is now one of Turkey’s hottest tourist destinations, alongside Istanbul, Ephesus and Gallipoli. Sitting atop the plateau of the Anatolian peninsula with its idyllic rock formations, including caves, cliffs and sweeping valleys, it now attracts millions each year. But it’s not just a place of natural wonder. Cut into the rock are some the best-preserved churches…

Homily for Mass for Monday of the 34th Week of Ordinary Time, Year 1
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Monday of the 34th Week of Ordinary Time, Year 1

It’s the tenth largest ‘economy’ in the world, with a turnover of between $US1.7T to 4.5T per year, placing it somewhere between Canada and Germany as an economic power.[1] Yet it’s illegal and costs far more jobs than it creates. I’m talking about the counterfeit economy. Not counterfeit currency: that’s going out of vogue. But counterfeit luxury…

Homily for Mass of the Memorial of Sts Cosmas and Damian
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Memorial of Sts Cosmas and Damian

In ancient times the celestial spheres were thought to influence our health, moods, actions, fate. It’s not so crazy: after all, the sun is crucial for days and seasons, sleep and wake, photosynthesis and life. It’s light and warmth affects our moods, and some people suffer seasonal affective disorders. Its partner, the moon, influences the earth’s axis and wobble…

Homily for Mass for Tuesday 24th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Tuesday 24th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1

Over the last fortnight, the world has watched on in horror as two disasters struck North Africa. First, a magnitude-6.8 earthquake claimed around 3,000 lives as it devastated Morocco’s capital Marrakech and wiped-out whole villages in the Atlas Mountains. Those mountains rise by 1mm per year as tectonic plates press against each other, but roughly once-in-a…

Homily for Mass of the Twenty-Second Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Twenty-Second Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A

He was at the height of his powers going into the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. The British sprinter, Derek Redmond, held the British record over 400m and the year before was on the relay team that upset the red-hot US squad, winning the world championships. His Olympic campaign couldn’t have started better: he blitzed the field in his qualifying heat and…

Past, Present, and Future—Homily for Votive Mass of Our Lady of Fatima
Homilies

Past, Present, and Future—Homily for Votive Mass of Our Lady of Fatima

Having lost his only sibling, his mother and then his father before he reached adulthood, Karol Józef Wojtyła knew the importance of family. It would be one of his chief areas of teaching as pope, running like a watermark throughout his 27-year pontificate. Pope John Paul II believed the family is the school for a deeper humanity, the nursery of faith…

Homily for Mass for Wednesday 14th Week of Ordinary Time, Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Wednesday 14th Week of Ordinary Time, Year A

José Salvador Alvarenga is hardly a household name, but perhaps it deserves to be. In 2012 José and his mate Ezequiel set out on a seven-metre fibreglass boat for a night of fishing off the Mexican coast. It proved to be a nightmare. A catastrophic five-day long storm left them with no engine or radio. They had no instruments to figure out their location…

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE FEAST OF ST JOSEMARÍA ESCRIVÁ DE BALAGUER
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE FEAST OF ST JOSEMARÍA ESCRIVÁ DE BALAGUER

As a Fisher I am pleased to observe that there’s plenty of Anglophone idiom about fish. When asked before the last conclave if he was in the running for pope, the late great Cardinal Pell said it was one thing to be “a big fish in a small pond” like Australia, but that there were “plenty of fish” in the sees of the universal Church. He was himself subsequently the victim…

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A
Homilies

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A

Evoking Charles Dickens’archenemy of Christmas, Ebenezer Scrooge (in A Christmas Carol 1843), the economist Joel Waldfogelhas written Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn’t Buy Presents for the Holidays. He invites us to consider that “rooster sweater from Grandma or the singing fish from Uncle Mike” that we’ve…

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A
Homilies

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A

Alexander III (356-323 BC) was tutored by Aristotle and mentored by his father Philip II, before assuming the throne of Macedon aged only 20. Over the following thirteen years he led military conquests of many lands from Greece to as far as India, creating one of the largest empires in history and inaugurating the …

FERVORINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER “WALK WITH CHRIST”
Homilies

FERVORINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER “WALK WITH CHRIST”

C. S. Lewis said that “In Heaven, everything is either silence or music.”[1] The Christian God is the Word, the God who speaks. Yet, paradoxically, He dwelt voiceless in His mother’s womb for nine months, entered the world as a wordless baby, lived in obscurity in Nazareth for most of His life, and accomplished His redemptive work muted in His Passion…

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY, YEAR A

It’s a scene you could picture on the beach of Bondi or Manly on a summer’s day. A boy is digging a hole in the sand, frantically running backwards and forwards to the water’s edge to fill his little well with a seashell-full of seawater at a time. But strangely, instead of a lifesaver or bikini girl coming up to him, a bishop in full liturgical vestments…

Homily for Solemn Mass of Pentecost, Year A, + Adult Confirmations
Homilies

Homily for Solemn Mass of Pentecost, Year A, + Adult Confirmations

“Your mission, should you choose to accept it…” These eight words, together with a rather catchy theme song immediately evoke the Mission Impossible franchise. I grew up with the TV series (1966-73, 1988-89) about a small team of secret agents who apply their strategies and skills against existential threats from cold war enemies, corrupt government…

III. DEATH OVERCOME: HOMILY FOR THE EASTER VIGIL IN THE HOLY NIGHT
Homilies

III. DEATH OVERCOME: HOMILY FOR THE EASTER VIGIL IN THE HOLY NIGHT

Health officials called her the Mystery Girl, following her rescue from the devastating earthquake in southern Türkiye and neighbouring Syria earlier this year. Three-and-a-half-month-old Vetin Begdas had been buried for five days beneath the rubble of her family home in Hatay province. Amongst the more than 50,000 dead were all Vetin’s siblings…

II. DEATH’S GRIEF: HOMILY FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD
Homilies

II. DEATH’S GRIEF: HOMILY FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD

The Lamentation over the Dead Christ on the wall of the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua is one of the most haunting representations of grief in Western art. Giotto situates Christ’s companions around His lifeless corpse after He has been removed from the cross. Each expresses grief differently: with hands joined in prayer, reaching out to touch…

I. DEATH’S DARK SHADOW: HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE LORD’S SUPPER
Homilies

I. DEATH’S DARK SHADOW: HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE LORD’S SUPPER

It’s the most natural fear of all. Consciously or not, we do all we can to postpone it and to avoid thinking about it. We stave it off with medicine, hygiene, diet and exercise. But in the end death is inevitable: death and taxes, as they say. St Augustine called it “the debt that must be paid”.

When it comes to death, modernity…

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS

We know what the proverb means, but not where it comes from. “The eyes are the window to the soul” has been attributed to Sophia Loren,[1] Charlotte Brontë,[2] Ben Jonson,[3] Shakespeare,[4] da Vinci,[5] Cicero[6] and the Bible[7], though none of them actually said it. The thought is that you can read on someone’s face and eyes what’s going on underneath and who they really are. Eyes are more than receptacles for light; they also give back…

Homilies

Homily for the Mass of Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord, Year A

‘The Wisdom of Crowds’ is the idea that by pooling information, experience and judgment, groups of people make better decisions than individuals alone. Writers in social psychology, market economics, evolutionary biology and other fields argue that, as social animals, we achieve much more by collaborating with others. It’s not a new idea: in the Politics…

Homilies

Homily for Mass for the 5th Sunday of Lent Year A + Day of the Unborn

‘Jesus wept.’ (Jn 11:35) It’s the shortest and most moving verse of the New Testament. In two powerful words we glimpse the fullness of Jesus’ humanity: that rather than expressing a divine distance, impassability and indifference, Jesus is God come close, so close He could be overwhelmed with compassion for the suffering sisters, so close He could know for Himself…

Homily for Mass for the 4th Sunday of Lent (Laetare Sunday), Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the 4th Sunday of Lent (Laetare Sunday), Year A

Mr Beast is the YouTube moniker of 24-year-old American internet sensation, Jimmy Donaldson. After a youth misspent watching silly video clips, he decided to go viral himself with a series of outlandish stunts: going to the same fast-food outlet a thousand times in a row; building an exact replica of Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory; reading every word in the dictionary; eating a golden pizza…

Homily for Mass for Beginning Teachers For Sydney Catholic Schools
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Beginning Teachers For Sydney Catholic Schools

Launched in 2010 by then Education Minister, Julia Gillard, the My Schools website was a smash hit from the get-go, amassing 1.5 million hits on its first day—and causing more than a few technical glitches. It was intended to offer parents, educators and community as much accessible information as possible about our schools. Student population data would socio-economic advantage…

Homily for Men’s Ministry Mass, Monday 6th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1
Homilies

Homily for Men’s Ministry Mass, Monday 6th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1

Übermensch was the name given by the 19th-century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) to those who were above and beyond the ordinary run of human beings.[1] Sometimes the term is translated ‘Superman’, like the comic, TV and movie hero, but that’s not what Nietzsche meant. For him, the übermensch was no sci-fi being with otherworldly…

Homily for the Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass of George Cardinal Pell AC
Homilies

Homily for the Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass of George Cardinal Pell AC

In 2007 Cardinal Pell issued guidelines reminding clergy that funeral homilies should focus on the Scriptures and the Catholic faith, especially regarding the Resurrection and God’s mercy, and not be a eulogy or canonisation ceremony for the deceased. So, this one last time, Your Eminence, I will try to do as I’m told…

Introduction to Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass of George Cardinal Pell AC
Homilies

Introduction to Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass of George Cardinal Pell AC

Welcome to St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney for the Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass for George Cardinal Pell, Companion of the Order of Australia, Prefect Emeritus of the Secretariat of the Economy, and our beloved former Archbishop.

George was born in Ballarat, Victoria, in 1941 to Margaret and George (Senior)…

Homily for the Red Mass
Homilies

Homily for the Red Mass

In a recent Quarterly Essay entitled “Uncivil Wars: How contempt is corroding democracy”,[1] Waleed Aly and Scott Stephens addressed the contemporary phenomenon that every demographic feels victimised, and every issue draws sharp lines between us. Opposing sides consider themselves shamed and cancelled and regard the others as bullies and “deplorables”. Outrage and contempt are the emotions of the age. This undermines our ability to dialogue and govern…

Homily for the Midnight Mass of the Nativity of the Lord
Homilies

Homily for the Midnight Mass of the Nativity of the Lord

“He loves me, he loves me not, he loves me, he loves me not,” so the game goes as petal after petal is plucked from a daisy until the last petal answers the question. The history of ‘the Daisy Oracle’ has been traced through 19th-century classics such as Goethe’s Faust (1808) and Adam’s ballet Giselle (1841) back to the songbook of a 15th-century German nun (Clara Hätzlerin 1471) and before…

Homily for Mass of the 4th Sunday of Advent, Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the 4th Sunday of Advent, Year A

There are a few contenders for the most iconic line in an Aussie film. Who could forget Paul Hogan as Crocodile Dundee (1986) saying: “That’s not a knife”? Or Farmer Hogget (played by James Cromwell) at the end of Babe (1995): “That’ll do pig, that’ll do”? But perhaps the most popular Aussie film line, if sheer recitations are anything to go by, are four words uttered by Darryl Kerrigan…

Homily for Lourdes Day Mass for the Order of Malta
Homilies

Homily for Lourdes Day Mass for the Order of Malta

Professionally speaking, Luke was an overachiever. His ancient near eastern LinkedIn entry has him as a physician (Col 4:14), missionary (Acts 16:8-10; 20:5; Philem 24; 2Tim 4:11), and historian, whose publications include the Gospel of Luke and Acts of the Apostles (Lk 1:1-4; Acts 1:1-2) both of which made the New York Times Best Sellers list. Likely of Syrian background like Paul…

Homily for Mass for 1st Sunday of Advent, Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass for 1st Sunday of Advent, Year A

I suspect the groggy eyes of some of the congregation today have something to do with a certain football tournament taking place on the other side of the world. Some fanatics might have stayed up to watch Australia defeat Tunisia, and three more matches before coming to Mass! A few here might even have been interested in Croatia’s draw with Morocco last Wednesday or be up to see it go head-to-head with Canada…

MONDAY 32nd WEEK OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR 2 ACBC Plenary
Homilies

MONDAY 32nd WEEK OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR 2 ACBC Plenary

Recently three Catholic University of America researchers published Well-being, Trust and Policy in a Time of Crisis: Highlights from the National Study of Catholic Priests. It paints a rather bleak picture of priests’ fears of false accusations of abuse and of being abandoned by their bishop if that happened.[1] Ever since the U.S. Bishops’ instigated the Dallas Charter…

Homily for Mass of the 29TH Sunday of Ordinary Time Year C + Annual Marriage Mass
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the 29TH Sunday of Ordinary Time Year C + Annual Marriage Mass

This past week, the Church marked the sixtieth anniversary of opening of the Second Vatican Council. It was an event of epic, even biblical proportions. Where there were 200-300 bishops at the Councils of Nicaea (325 AD) and Trent (1545-63), and just over 700 at the First Vatican Council (1869-70), nearly 3,000 bishops from 112 countries…

Homily for the Solemn Pontifical Requiem Mass for Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
Homilies

Homily for the Solemn Pontifical Requiem Mass for Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

The Bible is ambivalent about monarchy.[1] The kings of the earth threatened the security of Israel, and the people long resisted having their own king, lest he be a rival to God’s sovereignty. The Jews were taught to “put not your trust in princes, in mortal men in whom there is no help”.[2] On the other hand, they thought of God as their heavenly king …

Homily for Mass of the 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C

He was only 15 when the Nazis deported him and his family to Auschwitz. His mother and younger sister were killed on arrival. He felt his God and his soul died that day also, and all his dreams turned to dust. But the boy and his father were able-bodied and selected for hard labour. They were transferred to Buchenwald in Germany where the father died soon after. But the boy survived to be liberated …

HOMILY FOR THE PONTIFICAL MASS OF CHRISTIAN BURIAL FOR  Rev. Ben Bezzina
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE PONTIFICAL MASS OF CHRISTIAN BURIAL FOR Rev. Ben Bezzina

Like most groups of teenage boys, the Wild Boars Soccer Team were a boisterous and adventurous bunch. They enjoyed each other’s company on and off the field, and regularly explored together the cave system near their local village in northern Thailand. Whether it was scrawling their names on the walls or initiating new members into the team, the caves …

Homily for Mass for the Twenty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the Twenty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C

In the introduction to his book, Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention, best-selling British author Johann Hari offers a striking illustration of our declining ability to be present and attend to the things right in front of us. On a recent visit to Elvis Presley’s Graceland estate in Memphis, he encountered devout pilgrims of the King of Rock and Roll, both young and old, taking in the experience …

Homily for Mass for the Solemnity of the Assumption (Votive Mass of the BVM)
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the Solemnity of the Assumption (Votive Mass of the BVM)

Most ‘Reality TV’ is not be very real, but something about it captivates many Australians. Recent data suggest that half of the most watched shows in this country are in that genre; the rest are sports. These have included the finales of Masterchef Australia, The Block, Australian Idol, The Voice and My Kitchen Rules.

Homily for Mass of the Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time C + Dempsey Medal
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time C + Dempsey Medal

Earlier this morning tens of thousands of participants in the annual City2Surf race set off from just outside our cathedral. Now in its 51st year, the race has become something of an institution, drawing considerable media attention. Alongside world-class runners and wheelchair athletes are mum and dad hobbyists, work colleagues dressed as Smurfs …

Homily for Mass for the Feast of St Christopher + 70th Anniversary of the Parish
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the Feast of St Christopher + 70th Anniversary of the Parish

“Lord, teach us to pray,” the disciples ask Jesus. But what does it mean to ‘pray’? Put simply, prayer is raising our heart and mind to God, mostly with a view to encounter and conversation. So Jesus begins His short course on prayer with saying: “Speak to God as Father, our heavenly holy Father.” Begin with your relationship with God …

Homily for Mass of the Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C + Dempsey Medal
Homilies

Homily for Mass of the Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C + Dempsey Medal

It’s a quintessential rags-to-riches tale. Having failed to land a teaching job and needing to support herself and her husband who was still studying, Betsy Sanders took a sales apprentice position in a department store for less than $2.50 an hour. Her ‘temporary’ employment with Nordstrom ended up lasting two decades, by the end of which she …

Homily for the Mass for the Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Homilies

Homily for the Mass for the Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C

The Aussie writer-director Baz Luhrmann is an undeniable titan of his craft. Four of the top ten grossing Australian films of all time are by him,[i] and his latest biopic, Elvis, is well on the way to being another smash hit. His style is utterly distinct: vivid eye-catching costumes, dizzyingly fast-paced action, operatic scores, …

FERVERINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER “WALK WITH CHRIST”
Homilies

FERVERINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER “WALK WITH CHRIST”

Thank you all for joining us for the Walk With Christ procession on the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ—Corpus Christi. First the construction of the George Street tram, then the COVID pandemic and associated limitations on public gatherings, have in recent years interfered with this particular tribute of love and public witness.

Pontifical Mass of Christian Burial for Richard Connolly
Homilies

Pontifical Mass of Christian Burial for Richard Connolly

In 1967 a rather precocious young Anthony Fisher complained to Sr Mary Eucharia RSM that the new hymn she was teaching us—Sr Miriam Therese Winter’s “I saw raindrops on my window: joy is like the rain”—seemed barely to mention God. In response Sister offered us a better hymn: she taught us Richard Connolly and James McAuley’s ♪♪ Seek, O seek the Lord, while He is near, Trust …

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST PETER CHANEL
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST PETER CHANEL

n the extreme sport of free-diving, competitors hold their breath unaided for as long as they can and drop to a depth of water as low as they can before resurfacing: some of you here tonight may have tried this as kids and given your mothers a fright! The king of this sport is Viennese-born Herbert Nitsch…

DIVINE MERCY SUNDAY- Vigil Mass of ANZAC Day
Homilies

DIVINE MERCY SUNDAY- Vigil Mass of ANZAC Day

Just across the way from us, at the heart of the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, stands what some consider to be Australia’s greatest sculpture.1 Rayner Hoff’s bronze of ‘Sacrifice’ (1930-34) is in the Hall of Silence amidst many other features created by him. At remembrance services and other times, the sculpture is the object of contemplation for staff, pilgrims and tourists.

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Sunday of the Resurrection
Homilies

Homily for the Solemn Mass of the Sunday of the Resurrection

Simon Peter and John come running to the tomb (Jn 20:1-9). In Eugène Burnand’s impressionist painting of the incident (1898, Musée d’Orsay, Paris), it is a glorious dawn and Peter is staring ahead, hand-on-heart, finger pointing forward, face confused like a rabbit in headlights.

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night
Homilies

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night

When people come to church on Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, All Souls Day or even Easter, most don’t do so out of sentimentality or habit as they might at Christmas, but rather because the feast itself and the ritual speaks to some challenge in their lives. This year’s Triduum has come in dark times …

HOMILY FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD

Last Sunday’s Passion of St Luke and today’s of St John are in different keys. At Luke’s Passover-turned-Eucharist Jesus spoke ominously of betrayal to come and communing in His broken body. He told His men to bring swords to Compline in the Garden. He sweated blood while begging the Father to relieve Him of what was coming.

Homily for the Mass of the Lord’s Supper
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of the Lord’s Supper

They’ve been dark times of late. The world has recoiled at the invasion of a free nation by a bully power, and at the numbers dead, damaged or driven out. Closer to home we’ve had bush-fires, floods, mice, COVID. Lockdowns and other public health measures have taken their toll psychologically, educationally and financially.

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS

Listening has been a particular theme of Pope Francis’ pontificate. Amidst the information overload and polarisations of modernity, and while promoting a more synodal Church, the Holy Father has regularly called us to listen more closely to what God and His people are saying. He begins his message for next month’s World Communications Day[ii] with the deep human need to be heard …

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD

Not too far from the Colosseum and Forum, at the summit of the ancient Via Sacra or Holy Street in Rome, stands a 15-metre-high arch. ­ The marble monument was constructed in 71 AD by the Emperor Domitian to commemorate a victory, the year before, of his older brother …

HOMILY FOR UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS

Old guys like me tend to ask younger people the same question. Not: do you prefer the Marvel universe or DC? Not: what’s your favourite team / fast food / dating app? Not: what’s your university, Netflix or Stan? Not even: what’s your religion, Apple or Android?

HOMILY FOR THE FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT, Year C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT, Year C

In 1971 Japanese salesman Goro Hasegawa rebooted a popular nineteenth century board-game with the new name Othello, in homage to its black-and-white discs. Two players take turns laying down their counters on an 8×8 squared board; when one surrounds the other’s disc it is ‘captured’ by being turned over as the other colour …

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 2ND SUNDAY IN LENT YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 2ND SUNDAY IN LENT YEAR C

Late last year Netflix aired a documentary, 14 Peaks: Nothing is Impossible, that told the story of Nirmal Purja, known to his friends as ‘Nims’. A former Gurkha turned mountaineer, on 23 April 2019 he climbed Annapurna, the deadliest mountain in the world.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR ASH WEDNESDAY FOR ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL COLLEGE
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR ASH WEDNESDAY FOR ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL COLLEGE

In 1988 two brothers, Thomas and John Knoll, created a computer programme that would be so widely used that thirty-plus years later the noun has become a verb and describes an activity no matter what app is used. Photoshop was originally intended for graphic designers, but it’s now well and truly mainstream.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST. JOSEPHINE BAHKITA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST. JOSEPHINE BAHKITA

Born in Darfur, Sudan, around 1869, a girl was kidnapped when aged 7 or 8 by Arab slave traders. She was made to walk barefoot 1,000 km to El-Obeid, forced to convert to Islam, and given the Arab name ‘Bakhita’ meaning lucky. Sold as a slave five times in all, she suffered repeated abuse, including elaborate scarification of her breasts, belly and arms, and being repeated lashed.

HOMILY FOR THE MIDNIGHT MASS OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MIDNIGHT MASS OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD

We all love a good ghost story. : In the highest grossing film of 1990, Ghost, starring Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg, there was romance, comedy, mystery and cheesiness. But like many such films, it bumped up against the metaphysical problem of bringing spiritual and material beings together.

HOMILY FOR THURSDAY 4TH WEEK OF ADVENT
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THURSDAY 4TH WEEK OF ADVENT

If ever you get to travel overseas again, and you find yourself in Florence, I suggest you stop at the Dominican Priory of San Marco. There between 1438 and 1452 the great Dominican painter, Blessed Fra Angelico, and team made over fifty frescoes and altarpieces, many of which are still in situ, making it the largest surviving group of related works by any Italian renaissance artist.

HOMILY FOR END-OF-YEAR CAS STAFF MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR END-OF-YEAR CAS STAFF MASS

‘The great slave revolt’: so the 19th-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche called the triumph of Christianity in the ancient world and he thought it no good thing.[1] Before Judaeo-Christianity came to dominate the West, he thought, morality was based on a distinction between virtuous individuals

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE DEDICATION OF A CHURCH
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE DEDICATION OF A CHURCH

“You are the rock on which I will build my Church,” Jesus says to Peter this morning (Mt 16:13-19). “You are God’s building… the temple in which the spirit dwells,” St. Paul says to the Corinthians as well (1 Cor 3:9-17). Why, then, do we bother to build churches for God of dead stones when each of us is His living building?

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA

“When Jesus saw the crowds, he felt sorry for them, because they were harassed and dejected, like sheep without a shepherd” (Mt 9:35-10:8). Our translation “felt sorry for” misses the mark: it’s both mild and aloof. But our English word ‘sorry’ does share the same root as the word ‘sore’, just as our words ‘sympathy’ and ‘compassion’ share roots with ‘pathos’ and ‘passion’.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF ORDINATION TO THE PRIESTHOOD OF REV. ANDERSON RODAS & REV. RAFAEL GALICIA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF ORDINATION TO THE PRIESTHOOD OF REV. ANDERSON RODAS & REV. RAFAEL GALICIA

Theodor Geisel—‘Dr. Seuss’ to those who grew up on his stories—was a Pulitzer Prize and Academy Award winning children’s author. He composed and illustrated more than sixty children’s books, mostly in anapestic tetrameter, the preferred meter of poets like Byron. Over 600 million copies of his books were sold in his lifetime, and translated into 45 languages, including Spanish, so Mexicans and Columbians could read him

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE OPENING OF THE FIFTH PLENARY COUNCIL OF AUSTRALIA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE OPENING OF THE FIFTH PLENARY COUNCIL OF AUSTRALIA

What’s in a word? We use words to name or describe, to reason, learn and remember, and to communicate to others. With words we write or speak our sacred texts, laws and decisions, records and contracts, essays and books, conversations and correspondence, newspapers and audio-visuals, poems and songs—disclosing ideas, norms, feelings and more.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 26TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 26TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

We like to think of Him as “Gentle Jesus, meek and mild”—for He is indeed love and mercy personified. But as Charles Wesley’s hymn continues, “Gentle Jesus, meek and mild, look upon a little child, pity my simplicity”. Aware as He is of the vulnerability and innocence of the little ones, Our Lord pulls no punches when it comes to those who hurt or corrupt them.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 25TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 25TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

The 19th century Russian playwright, Anton Chekhov, was also an important contributor to the evolution of the short story. His principle, known as ‘Chekov’s Gun’, forbade including elements that are not going to be ‘paid off’ later in the story.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 23RD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 23RD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

“Say to all faint hearts: ‘Have courage! Do not be afraid!’” (Isa 35:4-7) It’s a recurring antiphon in the Bible. Jesus said it to His disciples so many times you’d be excused for thinking He was getting repetitive! God, His Son, the prophets and evangelists come again and again to quell our anxieties and strengthen our resolve.

INTRODUCTION TO MASS OF THE 22ND SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

INTRODUCTION TO MASS OF THE 22ND SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

English sci-fi writer, John Wyndham, is best known for novels like The Day of the Triffids and The Village of the Damned. But short stories were really his thing. In one, entitled “The Wheel”, a young boy playing in the yard discovers pulling his cart is easier if he attaches turning round bits of wood to it.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 17TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 17TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

There are 37 miracles recorded in the Gospels, most of them in Matthew, Mark and Luke. John’s Gospel, which we heard today, is different. John only reports eight miracles, six of them uniquely among the evangelists, and all of them at much greater length.

HOMILY FOR 11TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR 11TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR B

There’s an old Peanuts comic in which everybody’s self-appointed life-coach, Lucy, is telling her younger brother Linus about the many uses of a tree. “They provide shade from the sun,” she tells him, “and protection from the rain. They prevent erosion, and their wood is used to build beautiful buildings.”

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS OF PENTECOST  (YEAR B)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR SOLEMN MASS OF PENTECOST (YEAR B)

Happy birthday! We gather today, as we would for any birthday party, so we can celebrate the Church’s birthday together. The Acts of the Apostles tell us that before Pentecost the disciples gathered in the upper room with Mary to pray for the wisdom to know what to do next (Acts 1:13-14).

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR B
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR B

They were practical men. The Apostle Peter, hero of our first reading (Acts 10:25-48), insisted he was “only a man”, a simple man, a fisherman (Mk 1:16); though Christ made him a fisher of men (Mk 1:17), he reverted to his old craft from time to time (Mt 17:27; Jn 21:3-19; cf. Mt 14:22-32).

HOMILY FOR VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY

Myth. We often use the term to mean some supposed ‘fact’ or version of events that is untrue but commonly believed. We might think of the ‘urban myths’ that using a mobile phone near a petrol pump risks blowing up the petrol station,[i] or using one on a plane will interfere with the navigation instruments.

INTRODUCTION TO FUNERAL MASS FOR EDWARD IDRIS CARDINAL CASSIDY
Homilies

INTRODUCTION TO FUNERAL MASS FOR EDWARD IDRIS CARDINAL CASSIDY

Welcome to this Solemn Pontifical Funeral Mass for Cardinal Edward Idris Cassidy, Companion of the Order of Australia, President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, President Emeritus of the Commission of the Holy See for Religious Relations with the Jews

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS

It’s a smelly Mass, the Chrism Mass. The scent of palms is still in the air from last Sunday. Then that of the olive permeates the cathedral, as deacons heave vats of oil up the sanctuary stairs. Then perfume fills the basilica as it is mixed with the sacred Chrism for the fragrance of Christ.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 5TH SUNDAY OF LENT  (YEAR B)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 5TH SUNDAY OF LENT (YEAR B)

A while back an eclectic Spanish art collection was offered for auction by Christie’s in London. The standout item was a life-sized painting of St Joseph and the Christ Child by the 17th-century painter, Bartolomé Murillo, estimated to be worth millions of pounds.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 4TH SUNDAY OF LENT  (Year B)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 4TH SUNDAY OF LENT (Year B)

What a strange choice of readings for a day we call ‘Lætare’ or ‘Rejoicing Sunday’! Our first reading from the Book of Chronicles tells how all the faithful – including the leading clergy – proved unfaithful.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 2ND SUNDAY OF LENT  (Year B)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 2ND SUNDAY OF LENT (Year B)

Peter, James and John are Jesus’ executive team. They join Him on occasions marked ‘private and confidential’, when healing in homes or contemplating Jerusalem or agonising in the garden. Paul calls them ‘the three pillars’ of the early Church (Gal 2:9).

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 4TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME (Year B)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 4TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME (Year B)

In 1925 the Star of the East sect of Theosophists built a 200-seat amphitheatre here in Sydney. Krishnamurti, their ‘World Teacher’, was expected to preach there. He was said to have prophesied Christ’s imminent return, walking on water through the heads of Sydney harbour, and so the theatre was built at Balmoral Beach.

HOMILY FOR END-OF-YEAR CAS STAFF MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR END-OF-YEAR CAS STAFF MASS

Welcome to our end-of-year Mass for the staff of the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney. How very sad that we are back to sitting at opposite ends of the pews from each other in masks and unable even to sing an Advent carol!

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA

You have to admit that grown men and women dressing up in the robes, medallions and eight-pointed crosses of mediaeval knights is rather strange! I say that as someone who wears a mediaeval habit every day and has quite a collection of silly hats… So what’s it all about, apart from the fun of fancy dress?

INTRODUCTION TO MASS OF CONFIRMATION
Homilies

INTRODUCTION TO MASS OF CONFIRMATION

What a time to be Confirmed! Tonight, our young people complete their initiation into the Christian life, membership of the Church, and the communion of saints. But we gather in the face of a word that’s been on almost everyone’s lips for months now, a word most of us never used and many not even have known until the beginning of this year: pandemic.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 33RD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 33RD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

One of my Dominican brothers, long since gone to God, wasn’t great at picking his audience or occasion. He was legendary for preaching on contraception in nursing homes. He used also to promise to “give ‘em hell” at Christmas, as he thought (rather uncharitably), that it was the likely destination for those who attended only annually!

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE SOLEMNITY OF ALL SAINTS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE SOLEMNITY OF ALL SAINTS

All Saints is not really the feast of all saints. It is not a celebration of those ‘living saints’ who are among us, transparent with God’s grace, demonstrating remarkable virtue. Nor is it a celebration of those becoming saints, whom St Paul dared call ‘saints’ already. No, All Saints is not about living saints.

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS

It arrived in Australia in the dying days of the First World War. Ultimately the Spanish Flu would infect a third of the world’s population and kill at least 50 million people. All those docking in Sydney were isolated at North Head, next door to St Patrick’s Seminary.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 29TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 29TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

Fratelli Tutti, the title of Pope Francis’ latest encyclical, comes from his name-saint, Francis of Assisi, as did the title of his previous encyclical, Laudato Si’. Where the earlier document focussed upon our responsibilities for the natural environment, the new one attends to our human ecosystem.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR MONDAY OF THE 28TH WEEK OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR 2
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR MONDAY OF THE 28TH WEEK OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR 2

Jesus’ caustic reproaches today (Lk 11:29-32) are occasioned by people asking for signs, for proof that the outrageous things He said and did were from God. On the face of it, that’s human enough: we all have our doubts about the claims of gurus, theologians and experts, let alone the remorseless critics of religion like the ABC and the SMH.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 26TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 26TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

Music is beauty made of air. Plato said it gives “soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and life to everything”. Shakespeare called it “the food of love”. Einstein said he daydreamed, thought, even lived in music. Billy Joel says music expresses and heals our humanity.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 25TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS FOR 25TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME A

It’s just not fair! When we hear this morning’s parable of the workers in the vineyard (Mt 20:1-16), the shop steward deep within each one of us irks with sympathy for those who’ve laboured all day under the hot sun. Why do those who worked only an hour, in the cool of the evening, get the same wages and even get paid first!

THE MASS OF ORDINATION TO THE PRIESTHOOD
Homilies

THE MASS OF ORDINATION TO THE PRIESTHOOD

The word pandemic comes from the Greek words pan meaning all – as in ‘panorama’ and ‘pandemonium’ – and demos meaning the people – as in ‘democratic’ and ‘demography’.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 22ND SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 22ND SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

Simon has just made his great profession of faith in Jesus as God and Saviour, been praised and appointed future pope (Mt 16:13-20). All of a sudden the mood changes. Having just renamed him ‘Peter’, Jesus now calls him ‘Satan’ (Mt 16:21-7).

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 21ST SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 21ST SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

In his international best-seller, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen Covey argues that there are three stages of maturity: dependence, independence, and interdependence. Together these three form what he calls ‘the maturity continuum’.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 20TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 20TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

Go out to all the world to preach the Good News,” Jesus said (Mk 16:15; cf. Mt 28:19). Paul in our epistle today brags of his mission to the gentiles (Rom 11:13-15,29-32) and we know that he ultimately joined Peter in giving the witness of blood in Rome.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 19TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 19TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

Most of Jesus’ miracles addressed people’s particular needs. Last Sunday He multiplied loaves and fishes to satisfy the hunger of the multitude.[1] The haul of fish and the changing of wine into water were on a similarly extravagant scale.[2] You might wonder if anyone really needed so much wine as He made for them at Cana, but if you watch the crowd-funded TV series, The Chosen, you’ll pick up the emotions, tension and potential humiliation around that wedding reception, and why the wine mattered so much.

Homily for Mass for the 18th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A
Homilies

Homily for Mass for the 18th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A

For some, this pandemic-enforced retreat has been an opportunity to connect more deeply with family and God – to give time to conversation and prayer so often crowded out by the busyness of our lives. Many have maintained their connection to Mass and parish by live-streaming; others, who can’t normally come to Mass, have enjoyed Mass coming to them at home.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 17TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 17TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME YEAR A

The Moirai or Fates were the good luck gods of the ancient world. People experienced many aspects of their lives as beyond their control. So much depended on where and when and into whose family you were born. On forces of nature, weather, accidents and plagues like COVID.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 16TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 16TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME, YEAR A

“To act on the belief that we possess the knowledge and the power… to shape the processes of society entirely to our liking – knowledge which in fact we do not possess – is likely to make us do much harm.”[1] So said the Austrian-British thinker Friederich August von Hayek in his 1974 Nobel Prize acceptance speech.Hayek was an economist, political philosopher and social theorist. Having survived fighting in the First World War and being infected by the Spanish flu, he dedicated his life to building a better world through economics.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE MEMORIA OF ST. BONAVENTURE + RITE OF CANDIDACY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE MEMORIA OF ST. BONAVENTURE + RITE OF CANDIDACY

The Second Ecumenical Council of Lyons of 1274 was one of the largest the Church ever held. Presided over by Pope Gregory X, it was attended by five hundred bishops, observed by kings and ambassadors, and advised by another thousand prelates and periti. On the agenda were the conquest of the Holy Land and the reunion of the Eastern and Western churches, and so it welcomed representatives of the Patriarch of Constantinople, of the Byzantine Emperor and even of the Khan of the Tartars.

HOMILY FOR TO MASS FOR 15TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A + ANNUAL ARCHDIOCESAN MARRIAGE MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR TO MASS FOR 15TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A + ANNUAL ARCHDIOCESAN MARRIAGE MASS

It was the most consequential wedding in history and it nearly didn’t happen. Mary’s marriage was threatened by misunderstanding and gossip, but righted by an angelic visitation and Joseph’s acceptance of her innocence (Mt 1:18-25). In the Joseph window here in St Mary’s Cathedral, Mary is dressed in the white and gold of a virgin queen, her long golden hair crowned with a floral tiara and rosary roses at her feet.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST

Australia breathed a collective sigh of relief when 14-year-old William Callaghan was found on Wednesday on a mountain north of Melbourne. William, who is autistic and non-verbal, was on a camping trip when he ran ahead and got lost, spending two nights in freezing conditions, in treacherous terrain, without food, water or protective clothing.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR PENTECOST, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR PENTECOST, YEAR A

In January this year NBC premiered a sit-com about a young computer programmer who, through a freak accident, develops the power to hear people’s innermost thoughts and feelings as classic songs. Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist is a quirky, funny series that doesn’t shy away from deeper questions raised by people’s ‘heart songs’, as Zoey calls them.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR A

The birds in Nunhead Cemetery begin Before I’ve flicked a switch, turned on the gas. There must be some advantage to the light I tell myself, viewing my slackened chin Mirrored in the rain-dark window glass, While from the graveyard’s trees, the birds begin.

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 3RD SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR A)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS OF THE 3RD SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR A)

If you had to stand up today and introduce the Risen Christ to a crowd, what would you say? A man is given that daunting task this morning. (Acts 2:14-33). He is called upon to be the very first Christian preacher. He’s Simon Johnson, an uneducated fisherman from the country, of vacillating and impetuous temperament, nicknamed Peter or Rocky by Jesus.

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS FOR ANZAC DAY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS FOR ANZAC DAY

“The effects of war are widely spread and can be long term or short term. Soldiers experience war differently than civilians, although [both] suffer in times of war…” So begins the 5,000 word Wikipedia entry on ‘Effects of war’. Yet strangely, apart from a passing mention of ‘trauma’, there is no discussion of war’s emotional and spiritual toll.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 2ND SUNDAY OF EASTER(YEAR A)
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 2ND SUNDAY OF EASTER(YEAR A)

Painted for the Marchese Vincenzo Giustiani at the beginning of the 17th century, The Incredulity of St Thomas was the most copied of all Caravaggio’s paintings in its day. It now hangs in the Sans Souci Picture Gallery—not in Southern Sydney but in Potsdam, Germany.

Homily for the Mass of the Day of the Resurrection of the Lord
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of the Day of the Resurrection of the Lord

Saved from what? Christians talk a lot about salvation through Jesus’ cross and resurrection, but in this age of science and technology, affluence and education, big government and media, do we really need saving? Well, healthcare may address our physical diseases, but we know that it can at best only postpone our deaths.

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night of the Resurrection of the Lord
Homilies

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night of the Resurrection of the Lord

In the middle of the 3rd century AD a pandemic of Smallpox or Ebola erupted in Ethiopia, spread quickly to Rome and Greece, and then swept through the whole Roman empire. Big concentrations of people in cities, excellent roads and great trade routes that were strengths of the Roman empire, proved to be fatal flaws in a time of plague.

Homily for the Celebration of the Passion of the Lord
Homilies

Homily for the Celebration of the Passion of the Lord

Normally on Good Friday I’d be looking out at two thousand or so people packed into the pews of St Mary’s. But today I stand in an empty cathedral looking into a camera. Beyond the lens are thousands of you across the country, in a living cathedral made up of tv rooms and home offices

Ferverino for Good Friday Stations of the Cross
Homilies

Ferverino for Good Friday Stations of the Cross

The recently restored paintings of the Stations of the Cross here at St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney are massive French oils, each weighing 200kg, bought in 1885 by Cardinal Moran from the Chovet studio in Paris. In most, Jesus looks at us, to engage, scrutinise or console.

Homily for the Mass of the Lord’s Supper Year A
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of the Lord’s Supper Year A

For some weeks now and perhaps many more to come, the COVID19 pandemic has meant no public Masses. Not gathering physically is hard for most people, since human beings are made for relationship, proximity, intimacy.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 5TH SUNDAY OF LENT A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 5TH SUNDAY OF LENT A

This is not the first time that the public celebration of Mass has been impossible in Australia. In fact it’s the fifth time. For the Aborigines of the East coast of Australia, ‘first contact’ with Christianity was the arrival of James Cook’s expedition exactly 250 years ago next month.

HOMILY FOR AUSTRALIA DAY MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR AUSTRALIA DAY MASS

Our readings today address the trials of Australians today. Amidst great hardship Paul urges us to persevere (Rom 12:9-13) and Isaiah prophesies a time when deserts will become fertile and scrub a thick forest, when the endangered will be secure at last and all dwell in domestic tranquillity (Is 32:15-28).

HOMILY FOR A MASS IN TIME OF FIRE
Homilies

HOMILY FOR A MASS IN TIME OF FIRE

Fire and water – which along with earth and air are the four classical elements – have always been both gifts and challenges for humanity. Water is the source of life, critical to hydration and growth, cleansing for bodies, clothes and land, and beautiful to view in lakes and seas.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY OF ADVENT A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY OF ADVENT A

When Joseph hears that his young fiancée Mary is pregnant, he’s agog and aggrieved(Mt 1:18-24). Perhaps he thinks she’s been unfaithful, or been violated, or is delusional. There’s probably been gossip about Mary and even about Joseph.

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE LOURDES DAY MASS FOR THE ORDER OF MALTA

Not a bad second best. Mattia Preti had studied the techniques of the Order of Malta’s most famous – or infamous – painter, Caravaggio, and made his own major contributions to the exuberant baroquing of Italy’s churches and civic buildings. But now he followed his Master into the Order, being admitted as a Knight of Grace, and was thereafter known as Il Cavalier Calabrese, the Calabrian Knight.

HOMILY FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS

In the aftermath of the Second World War, hostility, not surprisingly, abounded. In an effort to rekindle old friendships and build new ones, French President Charles de Gaulle conceived of a series of televised games, originally played between French and German youths but quickly enlarged to twenty European nations over the following two decades.

FERVERINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER WALK WITH CHRIST
Homilies

FERVERINO FOR BENEDICTION AFTER WALK WITH CHRIST

Thank you all for taking part in the annual Walk With Christ procession, this year on the Solemnity of Christ the King. I acknowledge today the presence of the auxiliary bishops, clergy, religious and lay faithful who helped organise or assisted in today’s procession.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR TUESDAY 30TH WEEK ORDINARY TIME YEAR 1
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR TUESDAY 30TH WEEK ORDINARY TIME YEAR 1

Part of the genius of Christianity over the centuries has been its ability to take to itself a whole menagerie of ideas that come from outside it. In our own age the analytical philosophy, democratic politics, capitalist economics, Marxist analysis,

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 30TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 30TH SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME C

After the 2016 Rio Olympics, an image went viral of the American swimmer, Michael Phelps, and the one in the next lane, Chad le Clos. Phelps is focused solely on the finishing line, but le Clos is turned towards his arch-rival Phelps.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR FRIDAY 21ST WEEK ORDINARY TIME YEAR 1
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR FRIDAY 21ST WEEK ORDINARY TIME YEAR 1

More than a little OTT – over the top – wouldn’t you say? Five bridesmaids forget to bring extra oil for their lamps, which given that the bridegroom came late to the reception and the girls were presumably not professional bridesmaids, seems a simple and forgivable oversight (Mt 25:1-13).

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE ASSUMPTION OF BVM
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF THE ASSUMPTION OF BVM

“My soul is bursting as it magnifies the Lord. My spirit is overjoyed with God my saviour. He looks on me in my lowliness and raises up all the lowly. He loves me in my emptiness and fills all the hungry with good things.

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS OF THE ASSUMPTION OF BVM
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE VIGIL MASS OF THE ASSUMPTION OF BVM

In the Gospel of John is the story of a crowd of vigilantes about to stone a woman caught in adultery (Jn 8:1-11). Jesus intervened, writing the sins of the crowd in the sand and charging them: “Let the one without sin cast the first stone.”

HOMILY FOR THE ORDINATION MASS TO THE PRIESTHOOD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE ORDINATION MASS TO THE PRIESTHOOD

The summer of 1221 was a hot one. Global warming meant Europe was one and a half degrees warmer than usual, and was experiencing strange weather, melting glaciers, wheat growing all the way to Scandinavia, grapes all over England.

HOMILY FOR THE BLESSING OF THE TRIPTYCH
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE BLESSING OF THE TRIPTYCH

Today we bless a new work of sacred art, The Mother of Divine Wisdom with St Joseph and St Mary of the Cross MacKillop, created by Chiara Perinetti Casoni, whom we welcome today to Australia and celebrate in the University.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR CONSECRATED LIFE
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR CONSECRATED LIFE

Trials and errors, courts and appeals have been very much in the air of late! In our two readings this morning both Peter and Paul are on trial, and their further trials are prophesied. Paul had been imprisoned by the Governor of Judea, Antonius Felix,

HOMILY FOR THURSDAY OF THE 6TH WEEK OF EASTER C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THURSDAY OF THE 6TH WEEK OF EASTER C

It’s a hard time to be a priest. First the Royal Commission, then the conviction of Cardinal Pell; the media are getting ready for further excitement around that latter in the weeks ahead. At his request I’ve said very little publicly,

HOMILY FOR VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR VIGIL MASS OF ANZAC DAY

If you asked people right after the First World War who was the quintessential Anzac, many would have responded Albert Jacka.Described as ‘Australia’s greatest front-line soldier’, Jacka signed up for the 14th Battalion of the Australian Imperial Force, arriving in Anzac Cove on 26 April 1915.

Homily for the Mass of the Resurrection of the Lord
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of the Resurrection of the Lord

This week the world has been mourning the loss not of a person but of a building. More than eight centuries old, the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris was a wonder of Christian architecture and a centre of Western civilisation.

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night
Homilies

Homily for the Easter Vigil in the Holy Night

This week the world has been mourning the loss not of a person but of a building. More than eight centuries old, the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris was a wonder of Christian architecture and a centre of Western civilisation.

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE CHRISM MASS

On Corcovado Mountain in Rio de Janiero stands the famous statue of Cristo Redentor (Christ the Redeemer) – probably the most famous statue of Jesus in the world. Christ with His arms outstretched evokes the Creator-Provident God, supreme over the cosmos, holding creation in being and pouring out His blessing upon it.

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD

Quite a mood swing. One moment it’s ‘Hosanna, Praise the king’ (Lk 19:28-40), next it’s ‘Crucify him’ (Lk 22:14-23:56). One moment high as a kite, waving palms, singing and dancing, so excitedly the very stones seem to cry out; next it’s down in the dumps, full of anxiety and foreboding, looking for a scapegoat.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY LENT (LÆTARE SUNDAY), YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY LENT (LÆTARE SUNDAY), YEAR C

It’s a mystery in families, why one kid turns out one way, another so differently, even though they’ve had the same upbringing, affection and advantages. Today a boy asks for his inheritance early (Lk 15:1-3,11-32). In the Ancient Near East it’s a terrible request.

HOMILY FOR UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME AUSTRALIA GRADUATION MASS

‘A long melancholy meditation on loss, impermanence and that noble, stubborn, foolish thing called love.’ ‘What gives it its emotional heft is the sense of expiry and mortality that hangs over it.’ It ‘confronts the irreversible forward march of time, the pain of abandonment, the loss of love.’

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF CONSECRATION OF THE CHURCH
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MASS OF CONSECRATION OF THE CHURCH

The prehistoric peoples of Australia and the Pacific, Africa and the Americas, the ancient Greeks, Romans and others in Europe, the tribes of the Middle East, and the great religions of Asia, all had their sacred sites where they felt particularly close to God.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST. PATRICK
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE FEAST OF ST. PATRICK

The Sydney Church I grew up in still a rather Irish one. Already by then my parents and schoolmates, like many Sydney Catholics, were not: they represented the much more culturally diverse Australia which was emerging by the 1960s and is now so obvious here in Sydney.

HOMILY FOR BLESSING OF ST. PATRICK’S GREEN
Homilies

HOMILY FOR BLESSING OF ST. PATRICK’S GREEN

It’s a great pleasure to be here today, and I would like to thank you all for attending this important ceremony. I’m told that a number of the builders who have worked on this project are here today, so I give a special welcome to them!

HOMILY FOR RITE OF ELECTION OF CATECHUMENS
Homilies

HOMILY FOR RITE OF ELECTION OF CATECHUMENS

Most will be familiar with Aesop’s fable of the elephant and the mouse. As the story goes, the elephant spares the mouse when the mouse begs for his life, suggesting that one day he might be able to help the elephant.

HOMILY FOR THE 8TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE 8TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C

The blind leading the blind. The disciple disregarding the teacher. The hypocrite taking splinters from people’s eyes while there’s a plank in his own. Today Jesus convicts Israel and the Church of these failings (Lk 6:39-45).

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 5TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 5TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C

The 18th century Scots philosopher David Hume had some strange ideas. Taking a boldly skeptical approach to almost everything, he doubted that there is a permanent self that continues through time or that there was real cause and effect in the external world.

HOMILY FOR 2ND SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR 2ND SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR C

This morning’s story of Jesus’ “first great sign, given at Cana in Galilee,” is dazzling in its scale. Jesus turns wine into water, but not just enough wine for those at the wedding reception to drink, but about 800 litres – enough to drown them in! (Jn 2:1011)

HOMILY FOR THE MORNING MASS OF CHRISTMAS DAY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR THE MORNING MASS OF CHRISTMAS DAY

Infatuated! Drunk! Mad!I’m not describing some embarrassing aunt at a Christmas barbecue or some creepy guy at an office party. No, this is how St. Catherine of Siena – fourteenth century mystic

HOMILY FOR MASS 4TH SUNDAY ADVENT YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS 4TH SUNDAY ADVENT YEAR C

“I am become Death, Destroyer of Worlds.” So J. Robert Oppenheimer, ‘father of the atomic bomb’, famously said upon seeing the first detonation of his bomb and the destructive power he had unleashed.

Homily For 20 December Simbang Gabi Dawn Mass
Homilies

Homily For 20 December Simbang Gabi Dawn Mass

Why are we hearing about the Annunciation only five days out from the Nativity? Everyone knows there are nine months between a conception and a birth, and in Jesus’ case there was a great deal of

Homily For Christmas Mass With CAS Staff
Homilies

Homily For Christmas Mass With CAS Staff

The composer Arnold Schoenberg, notorious for his atonal music, once famously said that ‘my music is not lovely’. In my opinion, he was right. But he insisted that there can be a beauty in music

Reflection For Christmas Concert
Homilies

Reflection For Christmas Concert

Around this time of year, people often phone the cathedral or their parishes to ask what time the Midnight Mass will be. In fairness to them, they are not being stupid: the time of the “Mass at Midnight of the

Homily For Mass For 2nd Sunday Advent Year C
Homilies

Homily For Mass For 2nd Sunday Advent Year C

Why Advent? Lent is sort of obvious: as Jesus makes His way to Jerusalem, to His trial and Cross and tomb, we accompany him with hushed voices, downcast faces, wearing the colour of his bruises.

Homily For Lourdes Day Mass 2018
Homilies

Homily For Lourdes Day Mass 2018

In The Brothers Karamazov the Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky famously wrote that ‘hell is the suffering of being unable to love’. A serious Christian himself, though one who experienced grave doubts

Mass For Thursday 18th Week Ordinary Time Year II
Homilies

Mass For Thursday 18th Week Ordinary Time Year II

When people complained to Picasso that his portrait of Gertrude Stein did not look like her he famously replied, ‘No matter – it will.’ Picasso’s point was not merely that as Stein aged she would become more likely the unflattering face he had painted

Funeral Mass For Fr Paul Ryan
Homilies

Funeral Mass For Fr Paul Ryan

I was not lucky enough to have Rev. Professor Paul Ryan as one of my philosophy teachers when I was in the seminary. But I do recall with gratitude many things I learnt in philosophy that underpinned my theology, pastoral life and administration ever since.

Mass for the 17th Sunday Ordinary Time, Year B
Homilies

Mass for the 17th Sunday Ordinary Time, Year B

The miracle of the loaves and the fishes is the most reported of all Jesus’ miracles: it appears in all four Gospels and in two of them twice! John’s account (Jn 6:1-15) underlines the connection with the mystery of the Eucharist.

The Annual Mass For Consecrated Life
Homilies

The Annual Mass For Consecrated Life

When the great art historian, museum director and broadcaster, Kenneth Clark, finally entered the Catholic Church on his deathbed, he fulfilled an earlier prediction. He had said that when that time came it would be like a painting entering the Louvre: “It would find itself in some pretty queer company, but at least it would be sure that it had a soul.”

Installation of Fr Paul Smithers, St. Joseph’s, Rosebery
Homilies

Installation of Fr Paul Smithers, St. Joseph’s, Rosebery

Where do hymns come from? Well, the ancient Egyptians, Jews, Hindus and Greeks all had their religious songs. Christians were from the start great ones for singing, whether in private devotions or corporate worship (e.g. Mt 26:30; Mk 14:26; Acts 16:25; 1Cor 14:26; Eph 5:19; Col 3:16; Jam 5:13). Early hymns are recorded in the Scriptures, such as the Benedictus, Magnificat, and Nunc Dimittis …

Annual Marriage Mass, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Annual Marriage Mass, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Silence. It can be oppressive, as in today’s Gospel when the people of Jesus’ hometown effectively gag his words and miracles (Mk 6:1-6). Silence can be angry or indolent, as when people sulk or neglect to speak up when they should. It can even be a weapon of passive resistance. The Anglican divine, Adam Ford, tells of a husband and wife he met who hadn’t spoken a word to each other in twenty years.

FAREWELL FOR FR GARY RAWSON, St. Thérèse Church, Lakemba
Homilies

FAREWELL FOR FR GARY RAWSON, St. Thérèse Church, Lakemba

Before my conversion I was a proper little pagan. I lived for my next drink or other sensory experience, for the satisfaction of my baser passions. I cared nothing for other people’s needs and never gave a thought to worshipping God or serving humanity. I didn’t turn my mind to the great mysteries of God, creation and ourselves. I just wanted pleasant experiences and a quick fix to anything unpleasant.

INSTALLATION OF FR GREG MORGAN, St. Charles Borromeo, Ryde
Homilies

INSTALLATION OF FR GREG MORGAN, St. Charles Borromeo, Ryde

“Imagine Hamish McDonald, a Scotsman, sitting down with his Glasgow Morning Herald and seeing an article about how the ‘Brighton Sex Maniac Strikes Again’. Hamish is shocked and declares that ‘No Scotsman would do such a thing.’ The next day he sits down to read his Glasgow Morning Herald again; and, this time, finds an article about an Aberdeen man whose brutal actions make the Brighton …

SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

When Pope Urban IV decided to extend the feast of Corpus Christi to the universal Church, he wisely chose the great Dominican theologian, St. Thomas Aquinas, to compose the Mass and Liturgy of the Hours for this great feast. Thus he bequeathed to us the Sacris Solemniis with its Panis Angelicus, the Verbum Supernum, the Lauda Sion, the Adoro …

Vigil Mass for ANZAC Day, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Vigil Mass for ANZAC Day, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

N’oublions jamais l’Australie – Let us never forget the Australians. The instruction is written above every blackboard in the Elementary School in the French town of Villers-Bretonneux. In a campaign using the slogan “By Diggers defended, by Victorians mended” children from the state of Victoria each donated at least one penny to rebuild the school …

Installation of Fr Mani Malana as Parish Priest, Holy Family Church, Menai
Homilies

Installation of Fr Mani Malana as Parish Priest, Holy Family Church, Menai

The 2001 film Behind Enemy Lines is described on the DVD cover as “an adrenaline-pumping action ride”. It tells the true-ish story of a U.S. Naval Pilot, Chris Burnett (played by Owen Wilson). During a routine reconnaissance mission during the Bosnian Genocide of 1995 he obtained photographic evidence …

The Resurrection of the Lord (Easter Sunday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

The Resurrection of the Lord (Easter Sunday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Quinoa and kale, açai powder and green tea, a FitBit and a personal trainer – these are our culture’s secrets to living forever or till it feels like forever. There are even more ‘out there’ strategies: cosmetic, genetic or cybernetic treatments; getting yourself cloned or frozen till they have a cure; mind-to-computer …

Easter Vigil in the Holy Night, St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Easter Vigil in the Holy Night, St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Quinoa and kale, açai powder and green tea, a FitBit and a personal trainer – these are our culture’s secrets to living forever or till it feels like forever. There are even more ‘out there’ strategies: cosmetic, genetic or cybernetic treatments; getting yourself cloned or frozen till they have a cure; mind-to-computer uploading; and reincarnation into a younger body.

Passion of the Lord (Good Friday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Passion of the Lord (Good Friday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

How are we to connect with the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ that we just chanted (Jn chs 18 & 19) and make the story our own? This Holy Week I want to suggest the crucial link is the sacraments. It’s in the sacraments that Christ’s Paschal mystery is remembered; in the sacraments that its fruits …

Chrism Mass (Maundy Thursday) , St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Chrism Mass (Maundy Thursday) , St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

The first thing we do as we enter the world, we do through our mouths: we scream our lungs out. The next thing we do is breathe through them. Soon after we suckle with them. It’s said that infants think of the universe as an enormous teat just for them, and only gradually come to terms with the fact that …

The Lord’s Supper (Maundy Thursday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

The Lord’s Supper (Maundy Thursday), St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

We’ve heard the Holy Week story so many times before. How do we connect with it, make the story ours? What does it mean to say Jesus’ passion, death and resurrection saves, heals and elevates us? This Holy Week I want to suggest that the crucial link is the sacraments. It’s in the sacraments that Christ’s …

Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord, St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord, St Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ according to Mark is a powerful, no-nonsense telling of the story of Jesus’ last day (Mk chs 14 & 15). Though it might have just seemed long to you, it’s actually the shortest of the four versions and it has some unique features. One is its stark realism. Mark tells it like it is. His Jesus is no demigod, no superhero.

5th Sunday in Lent (Day of the Unborn), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

5th Sunday in Lent (Day of the Unborn), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Belinda and Shaun Stafford spent six years in an IVF programme after discovering they could not conceive in any other way – an experience Belinda described as “painful, tormenting, a strain on our marriage and just plain hard.”1 So, after having three children they decided enough was enough.

Ordination of Most Rev. Brian Mascord, WIN Entertainment Centre, Wollongong
Homilies

Ordination of Most Rev. Brian Mascord, WIN Entertainment Centre, Wollongong

The ‘Chair of Saint Peter’ was given to Pope John VIII in the year 875 by the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles the Bald. It is the putative seat of the first Bishop of Rome. Though it is the cathedra of St Peter’s Basilica, it is rather difficult to sit in, as it was enclosed in a baroque gilded casing by Bernini, raised high …

1st Sunday in Lent (Rite of Election), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

1st Sunday in Lent (Rite of Election), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

Were today not a Sunday it would be the feast day of Blessed Fra Angelico, a Dominican painter on whose feast day I took my vows, and the Patron Saint of Artists. After his fresco of The Baptism of Christ in his cycle for the friars’ cells in the Dominican Priory of San Marco in Florence, comes The Temptation of Christ …

Friday after Ash Wednesday (RoM Conference), St. Benedict’s, Broadway
Homilies

Friday after Ash Wednesday (RoM Conference), St. Benedict’s, Broadway

When you hear words like ‘Lent’, ‘fasting’ and ‘abstinence’, what immediately comes to mind? In my childhood it meant giving up what you liked best, like chocolate, for a few weeks, with exceptions made for birthdays, St Patrick’s Day, other solemnities and, in laxer families, Sundays.

The Feast of St. Josephine Bakhita, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

The Feast of St. Josephine Bakhita, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

When most people in a country like Australia hear the word ‘slavery’ they think of Africans brought across the sea to work the cotton plantations of America. But since the abolition of slavery in the British colonies in 1833, in the French colonies in 1848, and in the United States with the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, most people would think slavery a …

Votive Mass of the Holy Spirit (Red Mass), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

Votive Mass of the Holy Spirit (Red Mass), St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

One of the most highly acclaimed films of the past year is the biographical war drama, Hacksaw Ridge. Andrew Garfield brilliantly plays Desmond Doss, a Seventh Day Adventist Christian who served as a U.S. army medic in the Second World War but refused to bear arms. He was the first conscientious objector …

BOOK LAUNCH FOR ABOUT BIOETHICS:  FAITH, SCIENE AND THE ENVIRONMENT BY NICHOLAS TONTI-FILIPPINI
Homilies

BOOK LAUNCH FOR ABOUT BIOETHICS: FAITH, SCIENE AND THE ENVIRONMENT BY NICHOLAS TONTI-FILIPPINI

Thank you for those kind words of introduction. Five years ago Nicholas Tonti-Filippini reviewed my book, Catholic Bioethics for a New Millennium, for which I was very grateful. It is a pleasure, therefore, to return the favour by launching his final work, the fifth in his About Bioethics series published by Connor Court, regrettably without Nick’s physical presence with us tonight.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 17TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 17TH SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A

Our three parables this morning (Mt 13:44-52) compare the joy of finding the kingdom of heaven with the excitement people in Jesus’ world experienced on finding natural resources (like gold in a field), human inventions (like pearls set and retailed by merchants), or spiritual goods (like the ‘good fish’ sorted from the bad ones by the angels).

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 135TH ANNIVERSARY OF KINCOPPAL-ROSE BAY SCHOOL OF THE SACRED HEART – St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR THE 135TH ANNIVERSARY OF KINCOPPAL-ROSE BAY SCHOOL OF THE SACRED HEART – St. Mary’s Cathedral, Sydney

In the Star Wars film Attack of the Clones, the Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi is confronted with a rather unusual problem: he’s lost an entire planet! He knows on reliable authority that the planet exists, but it does not show up in the Jedi Archives which are supposed to be a complete record of the whole galaxy. Perplexed, Obi-Wan takes the problem to Master Yoda, the wisest of the Jedi knights.

Homily for the Mass of Ordination to the Episcopate and Installation as the sixth Bishop of Lismore of Most Rev. Greg Homeming OCD – St Carthage’s Cathedral, Lismore, Feast of the Chair of St Peter
Homilies

Homily for the Mass of Ordination to the Episcopate and Installation as the sixth Bishop of Lismore of Most Rev. Greg Homeming OCD – St Carthage’s Cathedral, Lismore, Feast of the Chair of St Peter

Some years ago I was praying in the crypt of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, many metres below the putative chair we celebrate tonight, now suspended below the main window of the Holy Spirit. As she pointed at the sepulchre, a large black American lady asked if I knew what it was.

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 3RD SUNDAY OF ADVENT YEAR A – ST. MARY’S CATHEDRAL, SYDNEY
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 3RD SUNDAY OF ADVENT YEAR A – ST. MARY’S CATHEDRAL, SYDNEY

If the Virgin Mary is our Christmas hero among the saints, holding forth the baby Jesus for our adoration; if the apostle John is our Lenten favourite, resting on Jesus’ breast at the Last Supper and alone of the apostles beside the Good Friday Cross; if St Mary Magdalene is our hero amongst the saints of Easter, first to proclaim Christ’s Resurrection; then St John the Baptist is surely our Advent Saint.

HOMILY FOR LOURDES DAY MASS WITH ORDER OF MALTA – ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL
Homilies

HOMILY FOR LOURDES DAY MASS WITH ORDER OF MALTA – ST MARY’S CATHEDRAL

In a speech in Doha billed as a critique of the foreign policy failures of the Bush and Obama eras, veteran New Yorker journalist Seymour Hersh alleged that the US military’s joint special operations command had been infiltrated by members of the Order of Malta and that these fanatics are modern-day crusaders who “aim to turn mosques into cathedrals”

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF MATER DEI CHURCH, BLAKEHURST 31st SUNDAY YEAR C
Homilies

HOMILY FOR MASS FOR 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF MATER DEI CHURCH, BLAKEHURST 31st SUNDAY YEAR C

I don’t often quote the German philosopher, Frederick Nietzsche, as he was no friend of religion. He thought that all believers and especially Christians were weaklings for prizing mercy towards the poor, sick and ignorant, for talking of forgiving enemies, turning the other cheek, and so on, and for masking the nausea and disgust he believed we should feel about life.

Holy Thursday Chrism Mass: Addresses and Homily
Homilies

Holy Thursday Chrism Mass: Addresses and Homily

Jesus said to His disciples, “with great desire have I longed to eat this Passover with you before I suffer” (Lk 22:15). So too, my dear brothers in the priesthood, and my dear brothers and sisters the faithful of Sydney, I have longed to celebrate Mass with you again while I have been suffering.

Homily for Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time on Feast Day of St Fiacre
Homilies

Homily for Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time on Feast Day of St Fiacre

According to our book of origins, the genesis of the human story was in a beautiful garden, full of flora and fauna, located near the rivers Pishon, Gihon, Tigris and Euphrates. Our first parents, Adam and Eve, gave up their privileged position and so ours in that garden “all for an apple”, disobeying God and committing the Original Sin;

Homily for Mass of Wednesday of the Twenty-First Week in Ordinary Time
Homilies

Homily for Mass of Wednesday of the Twenty-First Week in Ordinary Time

“And the Word was made App and dwelt somewhere in the virtual universe”. It is easy today to inhabit or at least slip in and out of an alternative reality created by devices – iPhones, iPads, Androids, Notebooks, Tablets and Kindles – each with almost endless connectivity, apps and tools, social networks and so on.

Homily for Mass with Seminarians
Homilies

Homily for Mass with Seminarians

We’ve all seen the ads for Lotto in which average punters are tantalized with offers of obscene amounts of money. In one a devoted father is shown giving his pregnant daughter and son-in-law a mortgage-free property.

Homily for the Solemnity of the Assumption and Ordination of Lewi Barakat and Thomas Stevens to the Priesthood
Homilies

Homily for the Solemnity of the Assumption and Ordination of Lewi Barakat and Thomas Stevens to the Priesthood

The low-budget Christian horror-film Final: The Rapture was released late last year. Directed by Timothy Chey, it details the global chaos after all the best people are raptured up to heaven – as some evangelical Christians believe will happen – and follows the stories of four of those left behind. Professional footballer Colin Nelson (played by Jah Shams) is one left stranded when his good Christian wife is assumed into heaven (she’s played, appropriately enough, by an actress named Mary Grace).

Homily for Mass at Sancta Sophia College
Homilies

Homily for Mass at Sancta Sophia College

The Incorruptibles could be a Marvel Comic or derivative Hollywood blockbuster about superheroes like The Fantastic Four, The Avengers or The X-Men. But in fact the title is a Catholic one, given to those Catholic superheroes, the saints, whose bodies remain substantially incorrupt after their death, people who were so holy in life that God has seen fit miraculously to preserve their bodies from decay, indefinitely or at least for many years after their deaths.

Homily for Feast of St Dominic
Homilies

Homily for Feast of St Dominic

Recently, Disneyland in California, Florida, Paris and Hong Kong banned selfie-sticks. Not because they were troubled with the self-absorption of those who wish to take photos of themselves: selfies will still be allowed. But the Disneylands regard the long sticks as an OHS hazard: sticks that might protrude from their rides and interfere with the mechanisms, or might poke people in the eye or other parts, are no longer permitted.

Homily for Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Homilies

Homily for Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

The word ent has deep roots in the English language. It is Anglo-Saxon (Old English) for ‘giant’. Most people today know it from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy and the films based on this. In the second volume, The Two Towers, we meet strong, giant, tree-like shepherds of the forest, most notably in the person of Treebeard.

Homily for Mass for Feast of St Ignatius of Loyola
Homilies

Homily for Mass for Feast of St Ignatius of Loyola

The Princess Bride is a 1987 American fantasy adventure film which has become something of a ‘cult classic’. It is commonly rated amongst the top 100 comedy films of all time and has charmed audiences ever since. It is structured around a grandfather (played by Peter Falk a.k.a. Columbo) reading a book to his sick grandson.

Opening and Blessing of the Moorgate Building
Homilies

Opening and Blessing of the Moorgate Building

“woman has baby” was the clever headline. In case you are the only person on the planet who hasn’t heard Private Eye was referring to the recent birth of Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte Elizabeth Diana…

Mass of Admission to Candidacy
Homilies

Mass of Admission to Candidacy

Welcome to tonight’s happy celebration of the Eucharist at which three of our brothers in Christ will be admitted to candidacy for the priesthood…

Low (Divine Mercy) Sunday
Homilies

Low (Divine Mercy) Sunday

They were sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, neighbours and friends. They were mostly students, with hopes and dreams and so much unrealized potential.

Funeral of Fr Brendan Shiel
Homilies

Funeral of Fr Brendan Shiel

Welcome to the Funeral Mass for our beloved Fr Brendan Shiel, a priest of Jesus Christ for almost 66 years and a loyal servant in the Lord’s vineyard

Chrism Mass
Homilies

Chrism Mass

Welcome to this year’s Chrism Mass. It is my first opportunity to celebrate this Mass with you as Archbishop and I count it a very real privilege…

Mass of the Last Supper
Homilies

Mass of the Last Supper

Tonight’s Mass of the Last Supper marks the beginning of the Sacred Triduum, a three-day-long, more or less continuous Liturgy commemorating the saving events of Christ’s Passion, Death and Resurrection.

Mass of Laetare Sunday
Homilies

Mass of Laetare Sunday

view VIDEO here

Welcome to today’s Solemn Mass at St Mary’s Cathedral. I am especially pleased to acknowledge concelebrating with me today Cardinal George Pell…

Homily for Ash Wednesday
Homilies

Homily for Ash Wednesday

Welcome all to today’s Mass to begin the Church’s penitential season of Lent. Today we impart ashes on our foreheads as sign of our repentance…

Mass to Open Seminary Year
Homilies

Mass to Open Seminary Year

It’s our foundation myth as a nation. It’s enshrined in our national monuments, public holiday, clubs and secular ritual.

Homily for Mass of Ordination of Deacons
Homilies

Homily for Mass of Ordination of Deacons

Tonight I have the very special privilege of re-visiting the Diocese of Parramatta to ordain three new deacons: Wilfredo Limjap, Pio Yong Ho Jang and Thomas Thien Hien Bui.

Lourdes Day Mass with Order of Malta
Homilies

Lourdes Day Mass with Order of Malta

Welcome to today’s special Lourdes Day Mass. I acknowledge the presence of Magistral Chaplains of the Order, Monsignors Doherty and Redden and Fr Nicholas Rynne…

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